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{| style="float:left"
{| style="float:left"
|[[Image:Flag of the Republic of China.svg|200px|Flag of the Republic of China]] [[Image:Republic of China National Emblem.svg|140px|National emblem of the Republic of China]]<br>
|[[Image:Flag of the Republic of China.svg|1000000x145px|Flag of the Republic of China]] [[Image:Republic of China National Emblem.svg|1000000x145px|National emblem of the Republic of China]]<br>
[[Image:ROC Administrative and Claims.jpg|thumb|350px|center|ROC Administrative and Claims]]
[[Image:ROC Administrative and Claims.jpg|thumb|350px|center|ROC Administrative and Claims]]
|}
|}

Revision as of 20:13, 21 June 2007

Flag of the Republic of China National emblem of the Republic of China
ROC Administrative and Claims

The Republic of China (ROC) is the oldest surviving republic in East Asia having been established in Nanjing in 1912 after the overthrow of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) which ended 400 years of monarchy. The challenges of stabilizing and modernizing the Chinese nation were hampered by domestic warlordism and foreign imperialism from the United Kingdom, the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Soviet Russia and the Empire of Japan. The Second Sino-Japanese War, World War II and the Chinese Civil War further weakened the nation and ultimately the Kuomintang (KMT) party retreated to the island of Taiwan (Formosa) in 1949 with the communists seizing the entire mainland and proclaiming the People's Republic of China (PRC). The ROC established Taipei as its provisional capital with the eventual goal of recovering the mainland. However it has been unable to accomplish this goal and has been administering the island groups of Taiwan, the Pescadores (Penghu), Kinmen (Quemoy) and Matsu since 1949. Its claim to being the sole legitimate government of China has gradually lost clout when it lost its seat at the United Nations in 1971 to the PRC. Since the 1970s many nations began switching diplomatic recognition of China from Taipei to Beijing following in the lead of the ROC's major ally, the United States. Since the 1990s, there has a been a gradual shift towards referring to the ROC as "Taiwan" due to the PRC's One-China policy of diplomatically isolating the ROC from the international community. Also, the Taiwan independence movement on the island has raised a political status issue. The PRC claims Taiwan as its 23rd province that must be reunited with the PRC and threatens military invasion should the island declare independence.